Order from us for quality, customized work in due time of your choice.
Informational” papers can earn a strong “B.”
“A” papers will argue a position an
Informational” papers can earn a strong “B.”
“A” papers will argue a position and deal with some academic issue grappled with by scholars.
Websites: Scholarly articles and books accessed online are absolutely acceptable, but PLEASE cite them with “normal” publication information: Author, title, publisher, date, page numbers (as if they were found in hard copy). For this class DO NOT include web links. Look at your text books. Do you find web links in the bibliography? Cite everything (book, journal, etc.) as if you found it in hard copy. Author, title, place of publication, publisher, date, etc. Or name of the journal, volume, date, pages, etc. That way I know it’s peer-reviewed, not an online encyclopedia or somebody’s blog…
If an article is not published in a serious academic journal (and is not “peer-reviewed” scholarship) it should not be used. Encyclopedias of any kind (including online encyclopedias) are not considered scholarly research, though they can certainly be used for your own background knowledge.
Do not include web links at all for my course. Ever see web links in your textbooks? I use the web all the time, but I cite as if I found in hardcopy without a web link. You might give “real” books a try in addition to journal articles. Ever try google books? Regular Google search; from drop-down menu select “books.” Some pages missing but it’s a gold mine! We even have a library, which for some reason nobody uses!
Number of sources: no minimum number; the more the better! AT LEAST half a dozen. Read serious academic articles to get a sense of how much research is actually done in the scholarly world.
A serious research paper should reflect a serious amount of research. This is not possible in the last few days of the term.
Order from us for quality, customized work in due time of your choice.